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Jean-Pierre Melville

Director

“I believe that you must be madly in love with cinema to create films. You also need a huge cinematic baggage.”

 

Biography

Jean-Pierre Melville (born Jean-Pierre Grumbach) was an amateur filmmaker as a teenager who, after the start of World War II, began making his own independent short and feature films. He hit his stride in the ‘50s with his memorable adaptation of Jean Cocteau’s novel, Les Enfants Terribles, and, over the next 20 years, specialized in intelligent and exciting crime films, most notably Bob le Flambeur, Le Doulos (aka The Finger Man), Le Samouraï, Le Cercle Rouge, and Un Flic. Melville also acted in his own Deux Hommes Dans Manhattan, as well as Cocteau’s Orphee, Jean-Luc Godard’s À Bout de Souffle (aka Breathless), and Claude Chabrol’s Landru (aka Bluebeard). He died in 1973.

(From http://www.allmovie.com/cg/avg.dll?p=avg&sql=2:102465 ) 

Wall

Displaying 4 of 19 wall posts.
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Human Form

29Dec11

More like Smellville. All his movies stink. Just kidding.

Human Form likes this

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Jorge Negrete

26Jul11

Vingt-quatre heures de la vie d'un clown (1946)?

Francisco R. likes this

Sancar Seckiner

27Jun11

Melville once said, “I believe that you must be madly in love with cinema to create films. You also need a huge cinematic baggage.”

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Bearcatmike

21Mar11

Love this guy. Perhaps, the greatest of all French filmmakers.

Fans

Displaying 10 of 1436 fans.

Forum

Displaying 3 discussion topics.

Jean-Pierre Melville's "Deux Homme Dans Manhatten"

2 posts by 2 people 10 months ago

Melville's best film?

29 posts by 23 people over 1 year ago

what does Melville mean by 'cinematic baggage'

6 posts by 5 people over 1 year ago